Popular Culture, the Avant-Garde and the Detainment Camp Toby Heys

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Popular Culture, the Avant-Garde and the Detainment Camp Toby Heys Document generated on 09/26/2021 9:32 p.m. ETC Popular Culture, the Avant-Garde and the Detainment Camp Toby Heys POP : 0/1 Number 91, October–November–December 2010, January 2011 URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/64242ac See table of contents Publisher(s) Revue d'art contemporain ETC inc. ISSN 0835-7641 (print) 1923-3205 (digital) Explore this journal Cite this article Heys, T. (2010). Popular Culture, the Avant-Garde and the Detainment Camp. ETC, (91), 31–33. Tous droits réservés © Revue d'art contemporain ETC inc., 2011 This document is protected by copyright law. Use of the services of Érudit (including reproduction) is subject to its terms and conditions, which can be viewed online. https://apropos.erudit.org/en/users/policy-on-use/ This article is disseminated and preserved by Érudit. Érudit is a non-profit inter-university consortium of the Université de Montréal, Université Laval, and the Université du Québec à Montréal. Its mission is to promote and disseminate research. https://www.erudit.org/en/ opular Culture the Avant-Garde and the Detainment Camp The remit for this text was to explicate the relevance of “contemporary works numerous and detailed. “Shafiq Rasul, one of the ‘Tipton Three’–British Muslims that integrated elements borrowed from popular culture, such as the icons or detained in Guantánamo for over two years tells of being short-shackled logos of transnationals, cartoon characters, or objects from daily life, industrially to the floor in a dark cell while Eminem’s ‘Kim’ and pounding heavy metal produced.”1 The framework of the investigation has been expanded however; played incessantly for hours, augmented by strobe lights.”3 It is during Michael in order that we can contemplate the ways in which popular culture and its Winterbottom & Mat Whitecross’s Silver Bear winning 2006 documentary drama old nemesis the avant-garde represent ‘borrowed elements’ that have been ‘Road to Guantánamo,’ (concerning the captivity of the ‘Tipton Three’) that re- integrated into the military-entertainments complex’s contemporary work of enacted scenes of this recently developed sonic technique firmly entered public illicit violence–Guantánamo Bay. The essay will argue that popular culture in the consciousness, amplifying the searing acoustic brutality of sensory overload and form of music is being used, as we speak, to further specific cultural, economic, excess into our collective imaginations.4 and socio-political goals. As a result, the role of aesthetics is not only bound more In an article named “The Pain of Listening: Using Music as a Weapon at closely than ever to the excessive realities of Western culture, more accurately it Guantánamo,” Tobias Rapp relates to us the circumstances in which the comes to represent and amplify them. Whilst the products of popular culture employment of popular music by artists such as Eminem and Metallica5 reveals function in a global network of economic exchange, they are now being used the states choice of ‘mainstream’ apparatus by which to apply force. However by occidental groups to debilitate and compromise the operating capacity of in Jon Ronson’s interview with Jamal Udeen Al-Harith, another Briton held in parts of this system. The conclusion to this deliberation will question whether extrajudicial detention as a suspected terrorist, a different sonic aesthetic the techniques of assimilation assigned to musical production could be practiced approach to torture is revealed. In conversation with Al-Harith about the types of upon the artworld by a military that desires culture to be appropriated as music used to disorient and disturb him in Guantánamo, Ronson cannot hide his armament. surprise at learning that guards played atonal soundscapes that had no beats or rhythms; aural collages consisting of noise, industrial sounds, electric piano and The Black Ecstasy of Popular Culture synthesizer lines. Such descriptions suggest that we could loosely categorise the Whilst there are numerous torture techniques and acts of inhumane cruelty to music as experimental electronic composition.6 Whilst we have become used to be taken into account when analysing the full spectrum spread of Guantánamo’s reading reports of popular music genres such as country, heavy metal, and rap organised violence, we shall be focusing on “the use of this kind of audio- being employed by the military for their abusive ‘through the day and night’ technique (that) is rather new in interrogation,” according to Vice President of torture sessions, the revelation that sonic compositions plausibly equitable with the Psy Ops Veterans Association, Rick Hoffman.2 The use of culture—in the form avant-garde cultural production is as bizarre as it is telling. Or is it? of popular music—as torture, appears to have been widespread throughout Whilst populist musical genres such as ‘Country’ and ‘Rap’ enjoy huge market Four men lifting an inflatable tank created by the Ghost Army. Ghost the by created tank inflatable an lifting men Four all the camps within Guantánamo Bay. The reports from ex-detainees being share and attention in the USA, they also have traditional structures at their core 31 Image of a detainee on his knees The Ghost Army logo. in the Guantánamo Bay detention camp. most utilised tracks in Guantánamo Bay to torture detainees. Convoy of armoured vehicles and tanks made of rubber by the Ghost Army. which have long historical lineages and which often share musical structures, Instead of thinking about mass, mainstream, and global cultures, we would narrative interests, and socio-political affiliations to musical genres from other do better to think about the grassroots activities, the micro movements, the countries. Thus for the Country genre we could think about the relations it shares modulations of DIY culture, the esoteric collectives, the locally occurring rhythms with traditional storytelling songs such as European Sea Shanties from the 19th of dissent and play, and the obtuse units of production as being more accurate single released by Metallica in 1991 on Vertigo Records. This was one of the single released by Metallica in 1991 on Vertigo century, or Mariachi music from Mexico. Meanwhile, for the Rap genre we can and meaningful purveyors of that which constitutes a nation’s identity. Musically think back to its West African traditional oratory roots in the songs and poems speaking, it is just such newly emerging, experimental and radical cultural sonic played by musicians known as Griots; or laterally conceive of the associations gestures that better articulate site-specific geographical locality, psychological and relations of resistance it holds as an art form with the Afro-Brazilian form associations and socio-cultural relations. As a genre, we could say that the avant- Enter Sandman of music, martial arts and dance known as Capoeira, to realise that the lineages garde is therefore idiosyncratically more definable as Western and by extension of these genres of music have long lasting and easily identifiable connections to American than any of the other genres we generally think of as being sonically global forms of musical organisation and politicisation. symbolic of the USA. Through such logic, avant-garde productions can be Whilst Country and Rap are identifiable as American mainstream genres, avant- posited as the most effective signifiers of specific cultural identity, a proposition Cover of the garde music can be plausibly considered as being more deeply entrenched in that the military-entertainment complex is starting to evidently explore. Occidental value systems than either of them. By employing avant-garde music to make coercive statements about its cultural, social, and martial ascendancy, * the U.S. military-entertainment complex has resonantly performed its own ** sono-cultural coup d’état. For that which speaks most intimately about a culture The use of music as a form of torture signifies that a new set of relationships and its particular distinguishing characteristics; those phenomena that set one has been orchestrated between the military-entertainment complex, the cultural culture apart (and thus serve to construct identity formation) from another are industries, and the wider social body. Popular culture has become a direct surely not the mainstream ones. Surely they are not those genres, compositions weapon, not an abstract or ambiguous tool, but a focal armament with the or movements of people, ideas, or practices that generate the amorphous and calibre to perpetrate surmountable damage upon the single and social body. ambiguous models of globalized culture that speak about everywhere and Thus Guantánamo’s music represents not only an assault on individuals, it also tell us everything about nowhere simultaneously. Attali constructs a similar symbolically announces the intentions of the U.S military-entertainment complex argument when he says, “Mass music is thus a powerful factor in consumer to ideologically propagate and transmit their culture into Muslim ipods, living integration, interclass levelling, and cultural homogenization. It becomes a factor rooms, shopping malls, public transportation system, and the streets—into the in centralization, cultural normalization, and the disappearance of distinctive core networks of everyday living. With powerful global communication networks, cultures.”7 production facilities, and distribution systems at their disposal, this threat from the 32 Ellsworth Kelly, Tableau Vert, 1952. The Art Institute of Chicago. U.S. is not an idle
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